The Niagara Falls Review

Wimbledon: What to watch

- HOWARD FENDRICH

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

As tennis turns to Wimbledon, there has been a bit of a throwback feel to this Grand Slam season so far.

At the year’s first major tournament, the Australian Open in January, Roger Federer beat Rafael Nadal for the men’s title, and Serena Williams defeated her sister, Venus, for the women’s title.

Matchups from a decade ago or more, right?

Then, at the French Open in May and June, Nadal reached a second consecutiv­e major final for the first time since 2014, and won one for the first time since that year.

And now, when play begins at the All England Club, so many of the key story lines will involve those same four players: Federer and Nadal because of their recent resurgence; Serena Williams because of her absence (she’s expecting a baby in September); Venus Williams because she is one of only two past champions in the women’s draw.

Here is what to watch on the grass courts of the year’s third Grand Slam tournament, which starts Monday:

And now? He extended his record with an 18th major championsh­ip in Australia, opened the year 19-1, took some time off and then won a grass title at Halle, Germany. With defending champion Andy Murray off-form this season, Federer is a popular pick to win Wimbledon for what would be a record eighth time. Grand Slam, too. But then his knees became a real problem on grass and he not only started losing early at the All England Club, he started losing to players ranked 100th or worse. “When Rafael is good with his knees,” said Nadal’s uncle and coach, Toni, “he can play well on the grass.” around but is now sidelined by a left thigh injury. Their absences lend the same sort of wide-open feel to the women’s draw that the French Open had.

So the two past winners in the field are Venus Williams, a five-time champion, and Petra Kvitova, a twotime champ. Kvitova will get plenty of attention because of what she went through in late December: An intruder attacked her with a knife at her home in the Czech Republic. Kvitova wound up with cuts to her left hand — the one she uses to swing a racket — and needed surgery. Wimbledon will be the third tournament of her comeback; she won the second last week on grass. Another two-time major champion to keep an eye on: former No. 1 Victoria Azarenka. This will be her first Grand Slam tournament in more than a year; she returned to the tour in June after giving birth to a son.

Novak Djokovic has won three Wimbledon titles and normally would be considered a real likely candidate for a fourth, but he has not played up to his usual standards over the past year. He went from winning four consecutiv­e Grand Slam titles, something no man had done in nearly a halfcentur­y, to failing to defend any of those championsh­ips; he lost in the third round at Wimbledon in 2016. He tried to look on the bright side recently, saying: “It is liberating a bit. I was very fortunate and privileged to have so much success in the last eight, nine years, and kind of entered most of the tournament­s as one of the biggest favourites. So for a change, it’s good to not be one of the top favourites. It releases a bit of the pressure.”

After coming out of nowhere to win the French Open, what will Jelena Ostapenko do for an encore? She arrived in Paris unseeded, ranked only 47th and without a title of any sort on tour, then used a fearless brand of high-risk tennis to win the championsh­ip. Now there are new expectatio­ns, and no opponent will overlook her, but consider this: Grass is her favourite surface; she was the junior champion at Wimbledon in 2014.

 ?? LEON NEAL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Twelve months after shutting down his season in the wake of a devastatin­g semi-final defeat, Roger Federer returns to Wimbledon as favourite to capture a record-breaking eighth title and become the tournament’s oldest champion.
LEON NEAL/GETTY IMAGES Twelve months after shutting down his season in the wake of a devastatin­g semi-final defeat, Roger Federer returns to Wimbledon as favourite to capture a record-breaking eighth title and become the tournament’s oldest champion.

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